constructive trusts Flashcards
what are constructive trusts?
trusts which are imposed by the court where equity feels it is justified
how do constructive trusts arise?
“by operation of law whenever the circumstances are such that it would be unconscionable for the owner of property … to assert his own beneficial interest in the property and deny the beneficial interest to another” - Paragon Finance Plc v DB Thakerar & Co [1999] Per Millett LJ
when is it imposed on the legal owner of property?
when they have dealt with that property unconscionably
what does it do for the wronged person?
gives them a proprietary interest in the trust property
what was the constructive trust in Rochefoucauld v Bousted [1897]?
intended trustee acquired property for the supposed beneficiary but the trust was improperly created
trustee held property on constructive trust
what was the constructive trust in FHR European Ventures LLP v Cedar Capital Partners LLC [2014]?
an agent received a bribe or secret commission as a result of his position held it on constructive trust for his principal
in relation to constructive trusts of the family home, which case is the starting point and what does this case say?
Gissing V Gissing [1971]:
there needs to be:
1. evidence of a common intention to share
2. detrimental reliance
burden of the proof is on the non-owner
‘the court cannot ascribe intentions which the parties never had’
what happened in Eves v Eves [1975]?
- Eves was told that the house could not be in joint names as she was under 21
- Lord Denning = she did work in the house and garden, more than many wives would do
- common problem - man and woman set up a house before getting married but the relationship breaks down before marriage = in law there is no claim
- constructive trusts solves this
- constructive trust gave her half the share in the house
what is the leading case in establishing whether there is a constructive trust where only one name has gone on the land registry?
Lloyds Bank v Rosset [1991]
- the common intention to share could arise expressly or by implication
- examples of implied intention through parties’ conduct:
- direct financial contributions to the purchase price are necessary in order to imply a common intention
- it is at least extremely doubtful whether anything less will do
what are the Institutional Constructive trusts (rationale 1 - the preferred view in England and Wales)?
- they arise by operation of law on the date of the originating circumstances
- the court merely recognises its existence
- rules of law determine the consequences
- because of these rules of law there is no discretion as to the consequences
what are some examples of constructive trusts?
Rochefoucauld v Bousted [1897]
FHR European Ventures LLP v Cedar Capital Partners LLC [2014
what is said about detrimental reliance?
there must be contributions of financial value - Burns v Burns
valuable work has been sufficient such as physical labour (Cooke v Head 1962), unpaid contribution to family business (Chan v Leung 2003)
paying other bills so that the owner can meet mortgage payments - Grant v Edwards
what is the overlap between constructive trusts and resulting trusts?
and what is the difference in how the shares are calculated?
both generally involve a contribution to the purchase price
- under resulting trusts the beneficial entitlement is calculated mathematically in proportion to the contribution to the purchase price
- shares in constructive trusts are determined by a number of factors that may result in the share being much greater than the amount contributed
what is the overlap between constructive trusts and proprietary estoppel?
both require detriment and work on the basis that it would be unconscionable for the legal owner to deny the existence of the beneficial interest
what is the difference between proprietary estoppel and constructive trusts?
- the remedy for estoppel is at the discretion of the court - it is the minimum necessary to satisfy the equity
- if a constructive trust can be found, the claimant may get much more